Mammals of the French English American Madagascar Expedition May 13, 1929-May 2, 1931
Bookreader Item Preview
Share or Embed This Item
texts
Mammals of the French English American Madagascar Expedition May 13, 1929-May 2, 1931
- by
- Archbold, Richard; Delacour, Jean, 1890-1985; Rand, Austin Loomer, 1905-1982; Greenway, James C. (James Cowan), 1903-1989; Lowe, Willoughy Prescott; American Museum of Natural History. Department of Mammalogy. Field Book Collection; American Museum of Natural History; Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar(1929-1931)
- Publication date
- 1929
- Topics
- Mammals, Description and travel, Travel, Scientific expeditions, Archbold, Richard, Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar (1929-1931)
- Contributor
- American Museum of Natural History Library
- Language
- English
- Rights-holder
- American Museum of Natural History Library
- Item Size
- 217.3M
Ink and some crayon on lined pages in leather bound book. Only 65 of the leaves are filled with data, but specimen numbers were prefilled throughout. Pages are smaller in dimension than binding; a typewritten listing of column headings is pasted to the upper border of the interior cover above the text block
Sheet of lined paper pasted to front endpaper -- List of mammal embryos collected
List of specimens collected between May 13, 1929 and May 2, 1931 by the Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar. Data includes type of animal, size and gender classification, location collected, collector and specimen numbers. The first two leaves of the book provide an explanatory diagram of the specimen tags and a list of abbreviations used throughout. The entries are written in many hands; presumably by the individual collectors. The Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar was an expedition to Madagascar coordinated with and represented by delegates from French, English and American institutions. Archbold's father had provided the sponsorship for the American Museum of Natural History to participate, and Archbold joined the expedition as photographer and collector
Richard Archbold was a sponsor of scientific study, mountaineer, aviator and research associate at the American Museum of Natural History from 1931. He established Archbold Expeditions (formerly Biological Explorations) which sponsored field work, a collection and curatorial staff at the American Museum of Natural History. He also founded the Archbold Biological Station in Florida in 1941 as a center for scientific research and ecological study. One of the first to recognize the value of air transport in expeditionary work, Archbold led three of the New Guinea Expeditions, the third of which culminated in the seaplane Guba II's historic transcontinental flight
Part of AMNH Mammalogy Departmental Library and Archives
Cataloged through a 2015 Leon Levy Foundation Archives grant
Sheet of lined paper pasted to front endpaper -- List of mammal embryos collected
List of specimens collected between May 13, 1929 and May 2, 1931 by the Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar. Data includes type of animal, size and gender classification, location collected, collector and specimen numbers. The first two leaves of the book provide an explanatory diagram of the specimen tags and a list of abbreviations used throughout. The entries are written in many hands; presumably by the individual collectors. The Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar was an expedition to Madagascar coordinated with and represented by delegates from French, English and American institutions. Archbold's father had provided the sponsorship for the American Museum of Natural History to participate, and Archbold joined the expedition as photographer and collector
Richard Archbold was a sponsor of scientific study, mountaineer, aviator and research associate at the American Museum of Natural History from 1931. He established Archbold Expeditions (formerly Biological Explorations) which sponsored field work, a collection and curatorial staff at the American Museum of Natural History. He also founded the Archbold Biological Station in Florida in 1941 as a center for scientific research and ecological study. One of the first to recognize the value of air transport in expeditionary work, Archbold led three of the New Guinea Expeditions, the third of which culminated in the seaplane Guba II's historic transcontinental flight
Part of AMNH Mammalogy Departmental Library and Archives
Cataloged through a 2015 Leon Levy Foundation Archives grant
- Abstract
- List of specimens collected between May 13, 1929 and May 2, 1931 by the Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar. Data includes type of animal, size and gender classification, location collected, collector and specimen numbers. The first two leaves of the book provide an explanatory diagram of the specimen tags and a list of abbreviations used throughout. The entries are written in many hands; presumably by the individual collectors. The Mission zoologique franco-anglo-américaine à Madagascar was an expedition to Madagascar coordinated with and represented by delegates from French, English and American institutions. Archbold's father had provided the sponsorship for the American Museum of Natural History to participate, and Archbold joined the expedition as photographer and collector.
- Addeddate
- 2017-09-21 21:41:53
- Betterpdf
- true
- Call number
- 100222036
- Call-number
- 100222036
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Genre
- Field notes
- Identifier
- mammalsfrenchen00arch
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t10p78v3k
- Identifier-bib
- 100222036
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 11.0
- Pages
- 103
- Possible copyright status
- In copyright. Digitized with the permission of the rights holder.
- Ppi
- 315
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
This book is available with additional data at Biodiversity Heritage Library.
comment
Reviews
Reviews cannot be added to this item.
349 Views
1 Favorite
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
For users with print-disabilities
IN COLLECTIONS
BHL Field Notes Project American Museum of Natural History Field Notes Biodiversity Heritage Library American Museum of Natural HistoryUploaded by amnhbhl on